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A little respect: Red Hat in black

Author: JT Smith

eWEEK: “Sporting its first quarterly profit like a feather in its cap, Red Hat Inc.
is marching forward with a new business plan that takes the Linux
distributor far beyond its Linux-in-a-box roots.

The company this week will lay out a road map for the future that is
based largely on a software-by-subscription model wrapped around
its Red Hat Network. The grand plan also calls for the creation of a
business unit to be announced this week devoted to consulting
services.”

Category:

  • Open Source

Alan Cox: Linux 2.2.20pre6 announced

Author: JT Smith

Cox writes, “Linux 2.2 is now firmly into maintainance state. Patches for neat new
ideas
belong in 2.4. Generally new drivers belong in 2.4 (possibly in 2.2 as
well
after 2.4 shows them stable). Expect me to be very picky on changes to
the
core code now.”

2.2.20pre6
o Merge all the pending ISDN updates (Kai Germaschewski)
| These are sizable changes and want a good testing
o Fix sg deadlock bug as per 2.4 (Douglas Gilbert)
o Count socket/pipe in quota inode use (Paul Menage)
o Fix some missing configuration help texts (Steven Cole)
o Fix Rik van Riel’s credits entry (Rik van Riel)
o Mark xtime as volatile in extern definition (various people)
o Fix open error return checks (Andries Brouwer)

2.2.20pre5
o Fix a patch generation error, replaces 2.2.20pre4 which is
wrong on ad1848

Category:

  • Linux

New Gnu-shirt available

Author: JT Smith

Mikael Pawlo writes, “As reported by Gnuheter, the new 2001 t-shirt from the Free Software Foundation is available. Printed on the front is a levitating gnu and the words, ‘Welcome to the GNU Age.’ Link to t-shirt orders.

The levitating GNU.”

Alan Cox: Linux 2.4.5-ac18 released

Author: JT Smith

ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/alan/2.4/. Intermediate diffs are available from http://www.bzimage.org.

2.4.5-ac18
o Issue scsi retries on ‘not ready’ (Khalid Aziz)
o Lave 1uS gaps in the eepro100 cmd probe, and
probe for longer on cmd timeout (Masaru Kawashima)
| Experiment to see what happens
o Prefetch the io_request_lock in the i2o block
irq handler (me)
o Prefetch atomics and locks in the i2o_scsi
driver (me)
o Fix wrong config define in asm-i386/processor.h (Arjan van de Ven)
o Use skb_queue_purge in atmarpd (Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo)
o Fix RLIMIT_NPROC accounting and root problem (Rik van Riel)
o Check out of memory case in i2c_parport (Rasmus Andersen)
o Enable internal amp on Targus Xtender and
Mebius PC-MJ100V (Frank Aune)
o X.25 cleanups (Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo)
o Don’t try and load parport_serial if it wasnt
built (Niels Jensen)
o interrupt.h needs sched.h for some ports (Jeff Garzik)
o Fix nwflash driver locking problems (Russell King)
o Fix bug ac17 added to the i810 tco driver (Andrey Panin)
o Fix memory pressure accounting bug (Rik van Riel)
o Small syncppp cleanups (Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo)
o Fix an sg leak on error path (Doug Gilbert)
o Fix comx_proto_fr possible leak (Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo)
o Update ataraid driver, add hpt raid support (Arjan van de Ven)
o Fix highmem leak in nfs when taking signals (Trond Myklebust)
o Update Rik van Riel’s credits entry (Rik van Riel)
o via audio updates, midi support, endian fixes (Adrian Cox)
o Further Configure.help merges (Eric Raymond)
o Update AMD756 pci irq routing driver (Jhon Caicedo)
o Make nvram allow the full 128 bytes on newer
PC’s (Dave Jones)
o Update the simple boot flag support (Dave Jones)
| User space is now expected to set booted ok, via the
| nvram driver
o Set -fno-common to catch duplicate variable
bugs (Arjan van de Ven)
o Handle out of memory in sr.c get_capapbilities (Rasmus Andersen)
o SIS900 driver warning fix (Dave Miller)
o Update 64bit unclear driver checks (Jeff Garzik)
o Fealnx and sundance driver updates (Dave Miller)
o Small pppo driver cleanups (Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo)
o Handle proc entry create failure in videodev (Rasmus Andersen)

Category:

  • Linux

A personal ode to the much-maligned Linux desktop

Author: JT Smith

– by Robin “Roblimo” Miller –
After all the “Linux on the desktop is dead or maybe it was never alive” articles I’ve read lately, I am relieved every morning when I walk into my little home office and find that my work computer is still happily running Linux, and that all my favorite Linux productivity applications are still doing their jobs.
Yes, there have been a few rebuttals out there. That’s nice. I’m glad to see them. But the overall attitude toward Linux as a desktop OS seems to be much gloomier now than it was a few months ago. A lot of this depression seems to have something to do with the demise of Eazel, a company that was supposedly going to suddenly, magically make Linux easy to use for the MacWindows masses.

I never tried Eazel. I never felt any personal need for Eazel. Sure, their Nautilus desktop looked cute, but I couldn’t see that it had any functionality or customization possibilities I don’t already have with KDE. If I click on a .doc file in the KDE (graphical) files manager, it automatically opens in StarOffice. MP3 file? Click on it, and it plays. Graphics file? Click, and I see the picture. If I want to move a file from one directory to another, I put my cursor on it and hold my left mouse button down while I “drag” the visual file representation to the folder where I want it, then choose whether I want to move it to the new location or just copy it there. To install a downloaded RPM software package, I click on it, enter my “root” password in a little form, click on “install,” and that’s that. Delete a file? Right-click on it, answer “Are you sure?” with “Yes,” and it’s off my hard drive for good — and with no annoying Windows-style registry detritus left behind; when you delete software in Linux, it is plain-and-simple gone!

None of this is rocket science. It is point, click, drag, and drop. Let me give you a little demo: I’m suddenly in the mood for a little Bach. Glenn Gould’s 1956 piano version of The Goldberg Variations ought to do it. Click! And it’s coming out of my nice speakers, clear as anything.

There is nothing dead about my Linux desktop. It sings, it dances, it keeps my personal and small business books with GnuCash.

I have given public demonstrations of Linux on the desktop in front of Windows-using audiences, and they are always amazed by the fact that I can do the same office-type tasks they can, just as easily if not more so. Another jaw-dropper for many of them is that during my demonstrations I call up a terminal window and display a command line only to show them I have one, but otherwise I never look at strings of goopy little non-human characters or do any of that geeky stuff. A lot of people seem to have been told they can only use Linux if they master a lot of Unix-style text commands. This may have been true in 1997 or 1998, but it is no longer true in 2001.

Another funny thing is, even though the commercial GNU/Linux distribution I use on my laptop (Mandrake 8.0) is a practical package that contains not only the basic operating system, but all the software I need to do all my work, most of the ultra-geek Linux users I know sneer at it precisely because it is so easy to install, configure, and use. I think they are scared of watching the masses (people like me) use Linux without problems, and they feel it takes away from the essential hacker club nature Linux had back in the old days, when it could take days of installing and tweaking and symlinking to get a usable Linux desktop going.

Linux users no longer form an elite club. The crowd that wants to use GNU/Linux just to prove they are hard-core are moving on to the various BSD Unixes, which still take work and knowledge to get installed and fully user-operational on a typical PC desktop (or laptop).

Perhaps, to the super-hacker crowd, Linux on the desktop is now dead. And perhaps it was never alive for those who were only willing to try Linux if they could get something like Eazel’s slick-looking Mac-alike file system, and were too snobbish to truck with anything plain and workmanlike like regular old Gnome or KDE.

But for the rest of us, Linux on the desktop is a practical tool, perhaps not full of frills, but more than able to handle almost any normal home or office computing job — except virus-spreading, which is the one popular workplace computer task Windows does perfectly but Linux can hardly do at all.

Category:

  • Linux

SuSE 7.1, we hardly knew ye…

Author: JT Smith

LinuxPlanet: “I am not trying to bash SuSE here, nor am I trying to give fuel to the fire for the committed SuSE-bashers. [Disclaimer:
SuSE has used a quote from a previous review I did for them on the packaging for SuSE Linux 7.2. I was not
compensated in any way for this blurb, but they did do it with my full permission.] But no one was more surprised than I
when the box for SuSE came in the mail last week except my fellow editor Michael Hall, with whom I was speaking on
the phone when the delivery came. I believe his first comment was “really?”

Category:

  • Linux

Bose goes MP3

Author: JT Smith

An anonymous reader writes: “With the rise in digital music comes a rise in people using their PCs to sub for their stereo. Bose has released a new product to serve the 70 million present and former Napster users looking to play their tunes on something better than the cheap speakers that came with their systems.

http://www.mp3newswire.net/stories/2001/bose.html

Secure FTP via SSH Tunnel

Author: JT Smith

LinuxSecurity: “When I travel, I keep my remote files on two servers: a Unix server and an NT
server, each serving a specific purpose. For my office files (Word documents and
such), I access an NT server running PCAnywhere and use the “File Transfer”
option – bandwidth permitting (not suggested over a 56K dialup connection). For
my Web data, I access a Unix server that incorporates a standard FTP daemon
and OpenSSH.

This article will point out the differences between standard FTP and secure FTP
using some real-world examples.”

Category:

  • Linux

Do magic with images on the shell

Author: JT Smith

LinuxFocus: “In this article we look at some spells the wizard of Image Magick can do using a collection of graphic tools
as his raw ingredients and the shell as his magic wand.”

Category:

  • Linux

People behind KDE: Michael Goffioul

Author: JT Smith

The Dot: “Long time follower and developer Michael Goffioul is our final guest on the People Behind KDE
before the summer break. Michael is the one responsible for a very important new feature of
KDE 2.2: the printing system. Thank you, Michael, for tackling this thorny issue.”

Category:

  • Open Source